
Chag Sameach From Efrat,
Israel
Shavuot 5758/1998
Of all the memorable historical occurrences in the Torah, none is
more significant than the day of the revelation at Sinai, when Israel received the Torah
from G d.
Nevertheless, unlike the date of the exodus from Egypt (Passover, celebrated on the 15th
day of Nissan) and the original date of the clouds of glory (Sukkot, 15th of Tishrei), the
date of the Revelation is never specifically recorded
within the Bible itself. Why not?
Moreover, although our Sages in the Talmud inform us that the biblical festival of
Shavuot
(Weeks) is actually the commemoration of the day of the revelation - the "Festival of
the Giving of the Torah", as we say in the prayers of that day - when we go to the
trouble of checking this out precisely with a calendar and Midrash, something doesn't
quite add up.
As we know, Passover commemorates the Exodus from Egypt, which took place on the 15th of
Nisan. To find out which day of the week it happened on, all we have to do is remember
that the 10th of Nisan, the day on which the paschal lamb was taken in preparation for the
redemption, fell on Shabbat, which is why the Sabbath before Passover
is called Shabbat HaGadol (the Great Sabbath). Therefore five days later, the 15th, had to
have been a Thursday.
Now, given that the only guidelines the Torah provides for designating the festival of
Shavuot is to count seven full weeks (49 days) from "the day following the
festival" [Lev. 23:15], if the first Passover in history fell on a Thursday
(Wednesday night), the count of 49 took place on a Wednesday night; hence the 50th day -
when the festival of
Shavuot was celebrated - had to have been a Thursday night and Friday.
This would be fine except for the fact that the Sages all agree that the Revelation at
Sinai took place on Shabbat and not on Friday! (Indeed, the Amidah of Shabbat morning
features the words, "Moses rejoiced in the gift of his portion" - a reference to
the gift of Torah which he received on the Sabbath.)
Therefore how can the Festival of Shavuot, which comes exactly fifty
days after the first day of Passover, be celebrating the giving of the Torah, which was in
fact
given on the fifty-first day of our count?
Let's consider several different approaches. The Magen Avraham
(Rabbi Abraham Gombiner, 1637-1683), in his commentary to the Orach Chaim section of the
Shulchan Aruch (Siman 263), explains that this seeming discrepancy 50th and 51st days of
our count (the 6th and 7th days of
Sivan) serves as our source that 'yom tov sheni of galus' (the second day of the festival
in the Diaspora) actually has its roots in the Torah. After all, throughout the Diaspora
we have a second day of Shavuot - the seventh of Sivan, and the 51st day from Passover -
which turns out to be when the Torah was actually given. When we remember that the Torah
was indeed given in the desert and not in Israel, it
makes sense that we received it on the second day of the Festival, celebrated throughout
the Jewish Diaspora.
Hence we have an ingenious source - a biblical source, no less - for the institution of
the second day of the festival in the Diaspora (the Talmud in Beitza, 2b and 3a, explains
the second day in terms of the Jews of Babylon not always knowing when the month began and
when the Festival was supposed to be celebrated).
Fascinatingly enough, the Shelah HaKadosh (R. Isaiah Horowitz, 1565-1630) gave a reason
for the second day of the Festival in the Diaspora which fits in very nicely with the
Shavuot reckoning. He argues that life in the Diaspora - because it is based upon gentile
customs and a gentile calendar - is far more removed from Jewishness than is life in
Israel. Hence it is twice as difficult in the Diaspora to feel the exodus, to experience
Divine Protection, to sense the
revelation, than it is in Israel.
From this perspective, the Book of Ruth, which we read on Shavuot, merely confirms the
hardships of remaining Jewish outside of Israel, and thus silently confirms the need for a
second day of the Festival outside of Israel. After all, the story of Ruth is not only the
tale of a sincere Jew-by-choice who becomes grandmother to King David, progenitor of the
Messiah.
The book opens when Elimelech (a nobleman in Israel whose name means, "G d is my
King") leaves famine-ridden Bethlehem in search of greener pastures in Moab. He soon
discovers that his decision to leave Israel was a disaster. His two sons, Machlon and
Kilyon (whose names mean "illness" and "destruction") marry Moabite
women and die before producing any heirs. He may have saved some money, but he sacrificed
Jewish continuity. And so this not untypical family that leaves the 'house of bread' ends
up encountering a 'world of death and illusion.'
The tale of Elimelech can be seen as a description of what happens to a Jewish family when
they attempt to embrace the Diaspora's values.
Ironically, if not for Ruth it would have been the end of Elimelech's line forever, the
Jew who left Israel doomed to historic oblivion.
Ruth's decision is the mirror-image of that of Elimelech, her ill-fated father-in-law. He
left his homeland to embrace Moab, Ruth leaves Moab to embrace the people and the G d of
Israel.
And so to counter the threat of assimilation that always hangs over a family in the
Diaspora, the Torah has provided an extra protective measure, the second day of yom tov.
A second reason why the exact date for the revelation is not revealed - and perhaps not
even celebrated -is in order to save the Jews embarrassment for a failed experience. We
know that only 40 days after the miraculous event of Sinai, the Israelites soon succumbed
to the temptations of the golden calf, returned back to the heat of idolatry.
Apparently G d gave them His gift too soon - before they were really equipped to
adequately appreciate it. The Bible, therefore, does not eternalize the day of the
Revelation. Shavuot is merely an agricultural Festival - the celebration of the first
fruits, and biblically speaking it only coincidentally works out to fall on the day before
the Revelation at Sinai.
Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch suggests that the Torah specifically wants us to purposefully
celebrate the Revelation a day before it actually occurred - in order to emphasize the
cardinal importance of "the day before".
Ordinarily when an important event is about to take place,
only those behind the scenes know how much preparation has gone into the event. For the
guest, all that matters is what he experiences at the moment the invitation told him to
appear. But for the families and all those involved in preparing a 'great event', the
months of careful planning are what truly counts and will determine the proceedings of the
evening. This is especially true with regarding to the receiving of the Torah: without
adequate preparation, without going through the forty-nine steps of purification leading
up to the final climax of the day before, the Torah that descends from Sinai won't find an
adequate vessel to contain its infinite blessings. Lack of adequate preparation
caused a tragic foul-up the first time. It is crucial that it never happen that way again.
Shabbat Shalom & Chag
Sameach!
Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, dean of the
Ohr Torah Stone Colleges & Graduate
Programs, is chief rabbi of Efrat.
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